Am bored so I decided to post the ficlets I wrote for the TezukaFuji drabble fest.
Title: Stranger
Rating: G
Warning: Fantasy!AU
Prompt: danger of talking to strangers
A gentle breeze picks up and causes the leaves of trees to rustle, giving Tezuka a fleeting impression that the trees are reaching out to him with gnarled, clawlike branches. Holding a torchlight, he tugs at the straps of his knapsack and walks a bit faster than he would have liked. He then slips his hands inside the pockets of his red windbreaker. Red is an unusual color for him, but he has to wear it because his mom picked it out for him saying, "You should start wearing things that aren't purple, Kunimitsu." When she forced him to put it on earlier this evening, he did not have the heart to say that he might start attracting bulls and boars in the forest.
In the left pocket of his jacket, he feels the smooth, cold metal, the Swiss Army knife his grandpa gave him on his birthday. It makes him feel a little bit more secure and he starts slowing pace again, making sure not to stray from the path of trodden-down leaves and grass that leads to his grandpa's garden.
His ear picks up the sound of crackling leaves and snapping twigs and his hand immediately grips the knife, ready to use it when the need arises. At thirteen, he knows how to defend himself from harm, wild animals and ruthless criminals alike. His grandpa taught him how to and taught him well.
From the bushes and into his trail, a person appears. Tezuka frowns as the person stares at him, apparently surprised to meet a person in the forest just as the night falls. A boy? A girl? Tezuka wonders. The person has shoulder length hair, a delicate face, smiling lips, half-hidden eyes and glowing skin under the rising moon. But the person doesn't seem to have a girl's build; he is so thin he seems too small for his light blue shirt and faded denim pants.
"Why are you walking in forest at night?"
Ah, a boy then, Tezuka thinks, judging from the strangely-pitched voice. He remembers that his voice sounded the same when it started cracking a little over a year ago. "I'm going to visit my grandpa. He lives near here." He narrows his eyes. "Why are you walking in the forest at night?"
The boy fiddles with the hem of his shirt, wringing and unwringing it with his fingers. When he finally looks up, he smiles and says, "I live near here too. Can I walk with you?"
Tezuka presses his lips. He knows very well not to mingle with strangers. But this one looks so fragile so Tezuka can't possibly harbor any suspicion. Besides, the boy is much smaller than him in build and in height so if the boy were meant to pass as an innocent-looking pickpocket, he thinks he can very well defend himself.
They walk down the path in silence for a while. Tezuka keeps glancing at the other boy with intent curiosity. Every time he does, the boy grins at him and he looks away instantly, embarrassed at being caught. "Are you going home tonight? After you visit your grandpa?"
"No," Tezuka replies truthfully.
"Ahh..." says the boy, nodding his head in thought. "That's good." He sees Tezuka's questioning frown and he shrugs. "The forest isn't safe at night. You might stumble across wild boars and wolves and tigers -"
"We don't have tigers here in Japan."
"What if one escaped from the zoo?" Asks the boy nonchalantly. "And trolls and elves and werewolves and vampires -"
"I'm sure we don't have those in Japan," Tezuka stresses.
The boy tilts his head as he continues walking. "I always thought we do."
Tezuka bites his lips, trying to stop himself from saying "Weird."
They reach his grandpa's hut in a few minutes. It's a wooden cabin sitting in the middle of pots of bonsai and orchids and medicinal plants. He invites the boy over, saying he brought tea leaves and pie and cake with him in his knapsack and he can share some, but the boy declines and says he better get going. Tezuka offers him his torchlight but the boy declines again, saying that he can use the moonlight as a guide. "If you say so," Tezuka says before walking down to his grandpa's door.
His grandpa opens the door for him when he knocks. He appears younger than he really is and is actually strong for his real age. Whenever Tezuka comes over, he teaches his grandson things about plants and bonsai-making and sometimes even judo in the mornings.
"What took you so long?" Grandpa asks tersely as he unpacks a box of pie at the table.
"I met a boy. He says he lives around here."
Grandpa's brows furrow together in a way that Tezuka's mom says her son has adopted. "There is no other hut in this forest."
Tezuka accepts his pie. And then he stops. He begins to wonder. Where does that boy live then?
Suddenly, a long, sad howl pierces through the silent night.
End.
Title: Forgetful
Rating: G
Prompt: forgetfulness
"Would you like some tea?" Fuji asks, sticking his head in the study room that Tezuka is occupying for another all-nighter.
Tezuka slides his glasses up and rubs his tired eyes. "Yes, please."
Trudging off, Fuji shakes his head. He worries sometimes that Tezuka studies too much. Setting aside the nights he spends alone in bed and the sexual frustration he has been experiencing over the past three weeks and all the meals he has to eat alone and all the nights he can't sleep because Tezuka isn't sleeping, he knows that studying too much is bad for the health. It deprives Tezuka of sleep, which kills brain cells and all.
As he makes his way to the kitchen to make some tea for Tezuka and himself, he hears a frantic shuffling of paper and books and pens. He sticks his head inside the study room again and he sees Tezuka lifting books and paper, searching the table for something he probably missed. "What are you looking for? A pen? A highlighter? Or is it a handout?" he asks, joining Tezuka's search.
"My glasses."
Fuji stares at Tezuka, bemused. "Your glasses?"
"Yes." Tezuka frowns. "Why?"
Admittedly, Fuji finds it difficult not to chuckle. And then he starts laughing quietly until his shoulders shake with mirth.
"What?" Tezuka asks irritably, still patting the desk for his glasses.
Still trembling with laughter, Fuji indicates his head. Tezuka touches his own head for a while and then he presses his lips, his Adam's apple bobbing up and down as it usually does when he is flustered. He slides down the glasses and fixes it on the bridge of his nose. He sits down on the chair with a straight back and a determined composure, and he starts piling the sheets of paper and the books that he has messed up.
Grinning, Fuji hugs Tezuka from behind and says, "I told you, you shouldn't study too much."
End.